Micro-History: The 1858 Great Stink of London & Joseph Bazalgette's Hidden Solution
Impossibile aggiungere al carrello
Rimozione dalla Lista desideri non riuscita.
Non è stato possibile aggiungere il titolo alla Libreria
Non è stato possibile seguire il Podcast
Esecuzione del comando Non seguire più non riuscita
-
Letto da:
-
Di:
A proposito di questo titolo
The Great London Stink: Micro-History of a Crisis & How a Massive Poop Problem Created the Modern City. Forget what you know about Victorian London—this episode of The Margin Fact dives deep into the summer of 1858 when the capital literally ground to a halt due to an unbearable stench from the River Thames. This wasn't just a bad smell; it was a devastating public health crisis that forced a panicked Parliament to greenlight one of the greatest engineering feats in history.
Join us as we pull back the curtain on this infamous micro-history event. We explore the Great Stink through the eyes of the people who lived it, the flawed science of Miasma Theory, and the political chaos it caused.
What You'll Uncover:
The Thames Disaster: How London's sewage, human waste, and industrial effluence turned the mighty River Thames into an open sewer during the summer heat of 1858.
A Parliamentary Crisis: How Parliament was physically forced to relocate or desperately drape curtains soaked in disinfectant to escape the smell.
The Overlooked Hero: Joseph Bazalgette: The brilliant engineer whose revolutionary system of interconnecting underground sewers and pumping stations solved the crisis and is still in use today! Bazalgette's Victorian engineering marvel fundamentally changed public sanitation and saved millions of lives from cholera and other waterborne diseases.
Margin Fact: The bizarre, small historical details that finally drove politicians to action—it took more than scientific proof; it took a direct, physical assault on the senses.
If you love unexpected facts, historical deep dives, and the stories of the overlooked and unusual, you'll love joining us on "The Margin Fact." Get ready to impress your friends with truly obscure knowledge.